Thursday, May 1, 2014

DOWNUNDER - FLICKIN' PLASTICS & MINI JIGS!

Made the most of a short vacation downunder to wet some lines with a mate. The first of a few days on the water, we hit a busy seaway with some light rods in hand hoping to find some willing customers. This was to be a good warm up session but also a precursor of the things to come over the next few days. The fishing, as typical in any built-up city, isn't easy. To get a few bites we had to work hard and also smart, as constant down-sizing eventually gave away the formula.
 
Here's what we did for the day on the estuary...
 
We always leave our mark, where ever we go...

Drifting over some weed beds, it was difficult with the srtong wind and impending rain. But soon we hit paydirt after a fruitless morning. A small Flathead obliges and we are happy to get the ball rolling on our adventure downunder...

The Jackall Waver Shrimp is a unique contraption. It's flailing pincers and legs are much softer than anything on the market, thus creating a more subtle action even with little effort from the angler...

Weedbeds are where you start looking if you want Flathead, and its there we get a second one, this time on the slightly larger Jackall Knuckle soft plastic. It results in a better fish than the first...

Flathead aren't the only ones hunting in these shallows. Bream are the quintessential Aussie fish, and this is the Yellowfin variety.

They love Jackall Waver Shrimps too...

Flicking soft plastics in water under a metre deep is exciting stuff. The clarity means sometimes you feel a take happen with a puff of sand. Here's a nicer Flathead to add to the tally, very much fun on the ultra light Evergreen Temujin 'Spider' rod...

The Jackall Waver Shrimp is taken deep without hesitation, good thing the light fluorocarbon leader held up against the rough jaws and fine teeth...

We comb deeper drops with mini jigs on the ultralight outfit when soft plastics take too long to descend and come up with a feisty little Bream for our efforts...

As mini jigs go, they don't come any better than the Jackall Mametai...

As a lucky bonus when flicking a DUO Ikakko around the shallows, we get a surprise visitor in the form of a greedy Whiting. Typically a bait-centric target, these fish will take artificials too, with the right presentation. That ended our first day on the water. Catch our other installments to follow.


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